Resistance of mature T cells to oncogene transformation.

  • Sebastian Newrzela
  • Kerstin Cornils
  • Zhixiong Li
  • Christopher Baum
  • Martijn H Brugman
  • Marianne Hartmann
  • Johann Meyer
  • Sylvia Hartmann
  • Martin-Leo Hansmann
  • Boris Fehse
  • Dorothee von Laer

Abstract

Leukemia caused by retroviral insertional mutagenesis after stem cell gene transfer has been reported in several experimental animals and in patients treated for X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency. Here, we analyzed whether gene transfer into mature T cells bears the same genotoxic risk. To address this issue in an experimental "worst case scenario," we transduced mature T cells and hematopoietic progenitor cells from C57BL/6 (Ly5.1) donor mice with high copy numbers of gamma retroviral vectors encoding the potent T-cell oncogenes LMO2, TCL1, or DeltaTrkA, a constitutively active mutant of TrkA. After transplantation into RAG-1-deficient recipients (Ly5.2), animals that received stem cell transplants developed T-cell lymphoma/leukemia for all investigated oncogenes with a characteristic phenotype and after characteristic latency periods. Ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction analysis revealed monoclonality or oligoclonality of the malignancies. In striking contrast, none of the mice that received T-cell transplants transduced with the same vectors developed leukemia/lymphoma despite persistence of gene-modified cells. Thus, our data provide direct evidence that mature T cells are less prone to transformation than hematopoietic progenitor cells.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheDeutsch
Aufsatznummer6
ISSN0006-4971
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2008
pubmed 18566328